
Pick one or more. We'll use your choices and the connected bills to help you send a message to your elected officials.
Answer the policy questions below or skip any that don't fit your view. We use only your answers and the bills they connect to for your message.
1 bill on this topic
“AI civil rights rules should have clear ways for federal officials, states, and harmed people to enforce them.”
1 bill on this topic
“Organizations that build or use important algorithms should test them for harm, review how they work in the real world, and fix serious problems.”
1 bill on this topic
“AI systems used in major decisions should be tested, reviewed, and limited to uses they have been checked for.”
1 bill on this topic
“People should be told when AI affects important decisions and should have practical ways to understand, challenge, or report problems.”
1 bill on this topic
“Companies should have to check automated tools for serious risks before those tools affect people's lives.”
2 bills on this topic
“Algorithms used for major decisions should not unfairly deny people jobs, housing, credit, health care, voting access, benefits, or other important services because of traits like race, sex, disability, age, or religion.”
1 bill on this topic
“Covered companies should send the FTC a summary before using a new high-impact AI system and yearly summaries after that, usually without sending the full internal review, and the FTC should be able to privately share summaries with other federal regulators.”
1 bill on this topic
“Covered companies should have to send the FTC a summary before using a new covered automated system, update those summaries each year, use standard computer-readable report formats, and allow smaller or uncovered companies to submit summaries voluntarily.”
1 bill on this topic
“People, states, and federal regulators should have ways to enforce AI civil rights rules when covered groups break them.”
1 bill on this topic
“Automated-decision violations should be enforced through the FTC's consumer protection powers, and state attorneys general or other authorized state officials should be able to sue in federal court for residents who are threatened or harmed.”
1 bill on this topic
“Covered companies should have to review covered automated tools before and after using them, including how they work, what data they use, whether they perform worse for certain groups, what serious harms they may cause, and how people are told about or can challenge decisions.”
1 bill on this topic
“Large companies, data brokers, and major holders of personal data should be covered when they use automated tools that affect major life decisions such as jobs, loans, housing, school, health care, utilities, or legal services.”
1 bill on this topic
“States and the federal government should both be able to protect people from harmful automated decision systems.”
1 bill on this topic
“State officials should be able to sue over covered AI violations that threaten or harm residents, keep using state civil or criminal laws in state court, and preserve state, tribal, city, and local AI protections alongside federal oversight.”
1 bill on this topic
“State, tribal, city, and local governments should be able to keep or pass their own automated-decision laws instead of being blocked by a federal system.”
1 bill on this topic
“Covered companies should check high-impact AI systems for privacy and security risks, accuracy and reliability, different effects on groups of people, options for notice or appeals, and serious likely harms that should be reduced.”
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